President Trump said Tuesday that if he blocked some of his agenda amid a turmoil over comments from several allies about opposing the legal system, he would comply with the court's ruling.
“I have to always adhere to the court and then appeal,” Trump said when asked if he would comply with the court's order if they blocked his agenda. “But what he did is he's slowing down momentum, and that gives bent people more time to hide their books.”
“The answer is that I'm always following the courts and always protecting them, and we'll appeal,” Trump added. “But it takes a long time to appeal.”
Trump scoffed the idea that the court could prevent federal agency leaders from finding potential fraud and inconsistencies beyond their books.
“I can't imagine that it could be held up by the court,” he said. “The president or his representative, whatever the Secretary of State, the Secretary of State, the courts say they don't have the right to read their books and make sure everything is honest, I would like to say how you can Does that mean you can have a country in?”
Trump's comments include that Democrats and some legal experts have recently seen Vice President and Trump adviser Elon Musk not have jurisdiction to stop the judge from wielding his authority. After suggesting, come because you sounded alert.
“If a judge attempts to tell the general how to carry out a military operation, it is illegal. If a judge attempts to order the Attorney General about how to use his discretion as a prosecutor, that is also illegal. That's it,” Vance wrote in X. It owns it by a mask. “The judges are not permitted to control the legitimate power of executives.”
Musk recently sought to be fired each after a federal judge issued a ruling that temporarily halted access to Treasury data from the Ministry of Government Efficiency.
Some of Trump's early moves face legal challenges and have at least temporarily stopped the president's actions.
All attempts to abolish Trump's birthright, his administration's proposed acquisition of federal workers, and his attempted freezing of federal funding, were suspended by court ruling.





